Table of Contents
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Archives and Special Collections Finding Aids
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| Collection |
| Title: | Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra records |
| Dates: | 1915-1979 |
| Call Number: | M31 |
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Historical Note
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Considered to be the first swing band in the United States, the Casa Loma Orchestra got its start in Detroit as Jean Goldkette and the Orange Blossoms. In 1929 the band was scheduled to play at the exclusive Casa Loma, a new club in Toronto. Later that year, the band adopted the club's name and set up a corporation, becoming the first cooperative band of its kind. After playing at prestigious venues like New York's Roseland Ballroom and the Glen Island Casino, the Orchestra appeared on the "Camel Caravan" (1933), the first radio commercial series to feature a swing band. After recording for Okeh Records, the Orchestra signed with Brunswick, then simultaneously with RCA Victor, recording under the names Casa Loma Orchestra and Glen Gray Orchestra, respectively. Eventually, the band recorded exclusively for Brunswick, then Decca, under the name Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra. Gray, a saxophonist, began fronting the band in 1937 and remained its leader until the group disbanded in 1950. In 1956 Gray came out of retirement to record a popular series of phonograph records for Capitol Records, "Sounds of the Great Bands." He died in Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1963. |
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| Chronology |
| ca. 1900 | Glen Gray Knoblauch is born in Roanoke, Illinois. |
| 1919 | "Spike" Gray starts Spike's Jazz Band. |
| 1926 | Gray joins the saxophone section of Jean Goldkette's Detroit band, the Orange Blossoms. |
| 1929 | The Orange Blossoms are scheduled to play at the new Canadian nightclub, the Casa Loma, built especially for the Prince of Wales. Subsequently, the band changes its name to the Casa Loma Orchestra. The group dismisses its leader, Henry Biagini, and forms a corporation -- the first cooperative band of its kind with Gray as president, Pat Davis as secretary-treasurer, and Francis "Cork" O'Keefe as manager. The band is offered a recording deal with Okeh Records while booked at New York's Roseland Ballroom. |
| ca. 1930-1934 | The Casa Loma Orchestra leaves Okeh to record for Brunswick Records, then simultaneously for RCA Victor, under the names Casa Loma Orchestra and Glen Gray Orchestra, respectively. The band then records exclusively for Brunswick under the name Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra. |
| 1933 | The Orchestra appears on the first radio commercial series to feature a swing band, the "Camel Caravan." |
| 1933-1934 | The band plays summers at the Glen Island Casino (New Rochelle, NY) and winters at New York's Essex House. |
| 1934 | The group leaves Brunswick to record exclusively for Decca Records. |
| 1935 | The Orchestra plays at New York's Paramount Theater, inaugurating its famous stage-band policy. |
| 1937 | Gray replaces Mel Jenssen as the band's leader. The CLO is named the best swing band in the country by Downbeat magazine. |
| 1938 | The group is named the "sweetest" band in the country by Downbeat magazine. |
| 1941 | The band appears in the film "Time Out for Rhythm." |
| 1943 | Two of the band's most important members, trombonist Billy Rausch and vocalist Kenny Sargent, leave. The Casa Loma Orchestra appears in the film, "Gals, Inc." |
| 1950 | The Casa Loma Orchestra disbands. |
| 1956 | Gray comes out of retirement to record a series of phonograph records for Capitol Records, entitled "Sounds of the Great Bands." |
| 1963 | Gray dies in Plymouth, Massachusetts. |
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| Bibliography |
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The Big Bands Database. (http://www.nfo.net/)
Cape Cod Jazz Society. The Glen Gray/Casa Loma Collection. Jazz Notes. 1979 (Nov.-Dec.).
Chilton, John. Who's Who of Jazz: Storyville to Swing Street. Philadelphia: Chilton, 1972.
Claghorn, Charles Eugene. Biographical Dictionary of American Music. West Nyack, NY: Parker, 1973.
Garrod, Charles. Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra. Zephyrhills, FL: Joyce Record Club, 1993.
Gottlieb, William P. The Golden Age of Jazz. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1979.
Hamm, Charles. Yesterdays: Or, Popular Song in America. New York: Norton, 1979.
Jackson, Arthur. The World of Big Bands: The Sweet and Swinging Years. New York: Arco, 1977.
The Musicians Birthday Page. (http://www2.coastalnet.com/~r3s5p6ws/birthday/birthday.html)
Simon, George T. The Big Bands. New York: Macmillian, 1971. |
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